Business was never my destination — it was my vehicle. My purpose has always lived far beyond profit and balance sheets. It lives where people stand, where policy shapes the future, and where progress becomes a shared journey, not a privileged achievement.
I have spent my life not building companies, but building ecosystems — medical devices, healthcare manufacturing, agro, maritime, real estate, technology, and social impact platforms. People often ask how one woman navigates so many sectors. The truth is simple: I am guided by purpose, not convenience. When a sector needs transformation, I go there. When a community needs strength, I stand with them. When Bangladesh needs representation, I speak.
My work is not business. My work is nation-building.
Where People Come First
Behind every strategy I make, every company I build, every partnership I negotiate — there is always a human face.
A mother waiting by her child’s hospital bed.
A farmer struggling to access modern agro solutions.
A nurse is working a 12-hour shift without proper equipment.
A young entrepreneur fighting to be heard.
A child in an orphanage is hoping for love and opportunity.
An elderly parent wants dignity in their final years.
A factory worker relying on his job to feed his family.
These are not markets. These are lives. These are the people my work must serve.
This is why PROMIXCO Group was never created as a corporate empire — it emerged as a human-centric ecosystem. Every sister concern has its own soul: PROMIXCO Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, Tech, Agro, GreenHul Solutions, SAM Wears, Stylo Furniture, LD Veterinary Hospital & Pet Gallery, BS Orphanage Foundation, and Elderly Care Foundation.
Every entity is connected by one mission: to uplift lives.
Transforming Policy, So Progress Becomes Possible
I’ve always believed that no nation can progress if its policies stay frozen in the past.
That’s why I entered policy — not as a politician, but as a builder.
I championed the inclusion of Medical Equipment & Devices (ME&D) as a priority sector in the National Industrial Policy.
I advocated tariff reforms so local manufacturers could compete.
I supported DGDA in designing stronger frameworks.
I fought for domestic preference in government procurement.
I engaged global partners — AMTZ, Medivalley, Biovalley — to bring R&D home.
Policy is slow, but essential. Without the right policies, a nation works hard but moves little. With the right policies, even small steps can create revolutions.
The Future I Work For
A Bangladesh where:
- Hospitals rely on local manufacturers
- Women entrepreneurs get national-level respect
- Skilled workers receive global-standard training
- Exports grow in medical devices, furniture, agro, and maritime
- The elderly live with dignity
- Orphaned children dream fearlessly
- Pet care is seen as compassion, not luxury
- “Made in Bangladesh” becomes a global seal of excellence
Leadership Isn’t a Title — It’s a Responsibility
I never aspired to be called Chairperson, Director General, or Managing Director. Titles don’t lead — people do.
Leadership is waking up and asking: “How can I serve better today?”
Leadership is choosing ethics over shortcuts.
Leadership is standing firm during criticism.
Leadership is building people, not just profits.
Progress Never Sleeps — And Neither Do I
Every factory we expand, every partnership we build, every product we innovate pushes Bangladesh forward. From hospital beds to hydroponics, from ship recycling safety to medical apparel — the work is endless, but so is the impact.
My teams know this well: We do not work for today. We will work for the next 50 years.
Why I Continue — Even When It’s Difficult
Because someone must.
Someone must advocate for manufacturers.
Someone must protect health workers.
Someone must drive policy reforms.
Someone must support women entrepreneurs.
Someone must represent Bangladesh globally.
Someone must hold the flag high.
I am that someone — not because I’m special, but because I’m committed.
My Promise
I will continue to build.
I will continue to advocate for better policies.
I will continue expanding PROMIXCO globally.
I will continue supporting workers, children, the elderly, animals, and communities.
I will continue representing Bangladesh with pride.
Because my work is not business. It is a lifelong devotion to people, policy, and progress.